The first Trump administration's first public counter-terrorism strategy contradicts many of the principles and plans adopted by President Barack Obama and George W. Bush.
Al Qaeda has long used a variety of strategies to achieve that goal. To repress the United States, Al Qaeda is planning terrorist activities to revitalize the Islamic world (to follow the al-Qaeda flag) and convince the United States based on withdrawal from Lebanon. He bombed the Navy barracks and the US Embassy there and the Somali "Black Hawks" incident there. In addition, the al Qaeda insurgists who supported the Islamic world fought against the US-backed regime (and other places where they wanted to reproduce the American military and the Soviet experience in Afghanistan). Finally, Al Qaeda begins a series of promotions that Jihad convinces Muslims that they are their duties and persuades the jihadist to adopt the al Qaeda goal rather than the local jihadist group .
The rise of al Qaeda is divided into four waves. In 1988, Osama Bin Laden, Ayman Zawahiri and other leaders founded Al Qaeda to fight Afghan Soviet troops. Ten years later on August 7, 1998 Al Qaeda also attacked Nairobi in Kenya and the US Embassy in Dar es Salaam in Tanzania. Al Qaeda members bombed the aircraft carrier on October 12, 2000 and refueled in Yemen. This attack killed 17 American soldiers and 39 injured. The wave of the first attack peaked on 11th September 2001. In the next two years, Al Qaeda is facing a reversal by arresting or killing its leaders and agents in Afghanistan, Pakistan, the US and around the world.